There is no such thing as “7 contraindications to drinking chrysanthemum tea”. Chrysanthemum tea is slightly cold in nature, and should be used with caution for those who have a weak spleen, cold stomach, and diarrhea with loss of appetite. Chrysanthemum is the head of the chrysanthemum plant of the Asteraceae family, slightly cold in nature, sweet and bitter in taste, with the effect of dispersing wind and clearing away heat, calming the liver and Yang, detoxifying and eliminating swellings, and brightening the eyes. The medicine is suitable for fever and headache caused by external wind-heat or the first signs of wind-warmth, mild malignant cold (fear of cold), heavy fever, etc. It can also be used for vertigo, redness and swelling of the eyes caused by hyperactivity of liver yang (liver yang is over-exuberant, which causes dizziness, dizziness, headache and other symptoms), and it can also be used for treating furuncles (sores mostly occurring on the limbs or the face, with the shape of a small root with deep roots, as hard as nails), swellings and toxins caused by heat-toxicity and congestion. Chrysanthemum is slightly cold in nature, so it should not be used by people with loss of appetite and diarrhea caused by coldness in the spleen and stomach (weak and cold spleen and stomach). Chrysanthemum is usually decocted and taken internally, and the medication brewed in tea cannot completely analyze the active ingredients of the medication, and can only play a supplementary therapeutic role. If you have symptoms, you should take the medicine under the guidance of a professional doctor, do not take the medicine blindly on your own, in order to avoid delaying the condition or producing adverse reactions.